Ted Cruz has an audacious plan to win the GOP nomination

PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP/Getty Images If America's 58th presidential election validates Ted Cruz's audacious "base plus" strategy, he will have refuted assumptions about the importance of independent "swing" voters and the inertia of many missing voters.

Critics say his plan for pursuing the Republican nomination precludes winning the presidency.

Jason Johnson, Cruz's chief strategist, responds: "I'm working backward from Election Day," because Cruz's plan for winning the necessary 1,236 convention delegates is an extrapolation from his strategy for winning 270 electoral votes.

All presidential campaigns aspire to favorably change the composition of the electorate. Cruz aims to substantially reconfigure the electorate as it has recently been.

Between George W. Bush's 2000 election and his 2004 reelection, the turnout of non-Hispanic whites increased by an astonishing 10 million. Barack Obama produced a surge of what Johnson calls "two-election voters."

In 2008, the African American voting rate increased from 2004 while white voting declined slightly; in 2012, African Americans voted at a higher rate than whites.

In Florida in 2012, turnout of non-Hispanic whites declined from 2008 even though the eligible voting-age population increased by 864,000. Nationally, the Census Bureau's Thom File writes: "The number of non-Hispanic white voters decreased by about 2 million between 2008 and 2012."

In the past five elections (1996-2012), their share of eligible voters declined from 79.2 percent to 71.1 percent and their share of the turnout declined from 82.5 percent to 73.7 percent, while the Hispanic and black shares of votes cast increased about four and three percentage points, respectively.

Barack Obama and Mitt Romney debate in 2012. John Moore / Getty

Nonvoting whites, especially those without college experience, are among Cruz's principal targets. His geniality toward Donald Trump reflects the Cruz campaign's estimate that perhaps one-third of the Trumpkins have not voted in recent elections. If so, Trump is doing downfield blocking for Cruz, beginning the expansion of the 2016 electorate by energizing people whose alienation from politics has made them nonvoters.

Cycle after cycle, says Johnson, the percentage of true swing voters shrinks. Therefore, so does the persuadable portion of the electorate. Cruz aims to leaven the electorate with people who, disappointed by economic stagnation and discouraging cultural trends for which Republican nominees seemed to have no answers, have been dormant during recent cycles.

Consider Pennsylvania, which has voted Democratic in six consecutive elections and which James Carville described as Pittsburgh in the west, Philadelphia in the east and Alabama in between.

Cruz's aim, says Johnson, will be "to improve on Romney at the margins in the Philadelphia suburbs," do three points better than Romney (5.5 percent) among African Americans (with many "two election" voters staying home with Obama gone) and to locate and motivate many previous nonvoters in Pennsylvania's "Alabama."

In 2012, Obama became the first Democrat since George McGovern in 1972 to lose the Pittsburgh metropolitan area.

Whites without college experience include disproportionate numbers of nonvoters whose abstention in 2012, according to the Market Research Foundation, produced Obama's Electoral College victory. The Cruz campaign's substantial investment in data scientists serves what Johnson calls "behavioral micro-targeting," changing behavior as well as gathering opinions.

If a person drives a Ford F-150 and subscribes to Guns & Ammo, he probably is conservative. The challenge is to make him a voter by directing to him a package of three- or four-issue appeals tailored to him.

Cruz has county chairs organizing in all 172 counties in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada. National Review's Eliana Johnson reports that through the second quarter, Cruz had raised more "hard" dollars than any of his rivals, and super PACs supporting him have raised more than all but those supporting Jeb Bush. Jason Johnson describes the delegate selection process as follows:

Of the 624 delegates at stake on March 1, 231 are from Cruz's Texas and Georgia, where Cruz inherited Scott Walker's entire operation. With Oklahoma, whose closed primary will be especially conservative, these three states have 274 delegates, almost a quarter of the number needed to nominate.

Republican presidential candidates U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Ben Carson take part in the presidential debates at the Reagan Library on September 16, 2015 in Simi Valley, California. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Eighty-seven of the 155 delegates allocated on March 5 will be from Louisiana and Kansas. On March 15, when winner-take-all primaries begin and 367 delegates will be allocated, Bush and Marco Rubio will compete for Florida's 99 delegates, while Cruz is well-positioned for North Carolina's 72 and Missouri's 52 (Cruz's campaign manager, Missourian Jeff Roe, has run many campaigns there).

Whenever this cycle's winnowing process produces two survivors, they might be two young, Southern, first-term Cuban American senators. Rubio would be the establishment choice. Cruz, with his theory of the election, would not have it otherwise.